Fans of The Matrix and the Wachowskis may not know that the duo has a history in comics, even once starting their own comic book company. Launched after the release of The Matrix Reloaded and The Matrix Revolutions, Burlyman Entertainment was formed for the Wachowskis to create stories without having to worry about Hollywood. Doc Frankenstein was their first original comic, and it just might be their masterpiece.

Written by Lana and Lilly Wachowski and drawn by Steve Skroce, Doc Frankenstein released its first issue in November 2004. Reimagining Frankenstein's monster as a world-renowned scientist and adventurer who has survived to the present-day, Doc Frankenstein was a pulp-infused thrill ride that contained all the action and philosophy one would expect from the Wachowskis.

Doc Frankenstien TPB Cover

Unbeholden to film budgets and logistical realities, the Wachowskis and Skroce let their imaginations run wild on the page. It wound up taking longer than anyone expected for the series to complete its story, but Doc Frankenstein stands as a defining work in the Wachowski canon.

Doc Frankenstein Is the Wachowskis’ Under-Appreciated Masterpiece

First Released Between 2004-2007 in Single Issues

Doc Frankenstein jumping away from an explosion by Steve Skroce, from a comic book collaboration with the Wachowski sisters

We meet the titular character in the first issue, in which Doc Frankenstein has just defeated a giant monster. From there, we learn that Doc has acquired vast wealth since his creation in the early 1800’s, setting up his own utopian society as he attempts to help push humanity forward into the next century. Doc is ed by Tex, a werewolf bounty hunter he first encountered in the Old West, and his lover Monica, a fellow scientist/adventurer who is also handy with a machine gun. Doc also works with Vickie, the teenage descendent of Victor Frankenstein, and Einstein, a resurrected, genetically-modified Dodo bird.

Doc Frankenstein was originally devised by artist Geof Darrow, who gave the idea to the Wachowskis and Steve Skroce when he launched his series Shaolin Cowboy at Burlyman Entertainment.

Unfortunately, his progressive approach rubs some the wrong way, including the Catholic church, who send an army to eradicate Doc and his friends. This being a comic book that unabashedly leans into the ridiculous, the Catholic church is revealed to have their own army at their beck and call, with high-tech super-jets and their very own arsenal of atomic weapons. Doc finds his life upended when his organization is destroyed, and he is captured by the Catholic army and forced to question everything he knows when he’s rescued by something that can’t be explained by science: a fairy.

The Wachowskis Started Their Own Comics Company with Doc Frankenstein

The Matrix Led to a Different Kind of Sci-Fi Masterpiece

Doc Frankenstein hangs from a building while holding a gun

The Wachowskis weren’t exactly new to comics when they launched Doc Frankenstein in 2004. The filmmakers got their start at Marvel in the early nineties, working on Clive Barker adaptations before taking the when creating The Matrix. As such, Skroce was a natural fit for the sisters’ grand return to comics, and every page is filled with the kinetic action that made The Matrix a blockbuster success.

Unfortunately, Doc Frankenstein was plagued by delays almost immediately after it was first launched. Only six issues were released between 2004-2007, before the series went on an indefinite hiatus owing to the Wachowskis’ film work. It seemed like Doc Frankenstein would enter the long list of the great unfinished works in comics, as the years went by and the story remained unfinished. But in 2019, a hardcover collection of the entire six issues and 64 brand-new pages of story was released, finally providing Doc Frankenstein with the long-promised conclusion to its story.

From the Old West to WWII, Doc Frankenstein Chronicles the Creature through History

Based on the Novel Frankenstein by Mary Shelley

Doc Frankenstein shoots up some bounties in teh Old West

In her introduction to the 2019 collection, Lana Wachowski talks about the journey of creating Doc Frankenstein, and it becomes clear that the comic is one of the Wachowskis’ most personal projects. The long-awaited conclusion takes the story to some unexpected places, but fans of the Wachowskis will likely see how Doc Frankenstein fits in with the rest of their oeuvre. What started out as an action-packed, pulp thrill ride ultimately transforms into a treatise on love and acceptance, giving Doc Frankenstein an added depth that may not be immediately apparent at first glance.

Doc Frankenstein takes a subtlety-by-way-of-sledgehammer approach, which may be too overwhelming for some readers. The creators take wild tonal swings that don’t always work, but it's a reading experience that is all too rare. From new takes on classic monsters to Old West shootouts to the blasphemous, secret origin of Yahweh Himself, Doc Frankenstein throws in not just everything and the kitchen sink, but every other metaphorical appliance you can think of tossing in. Honestly, the series is all the better for it, as readers get to experience a pure dose of the Wachowskis’ imagination, unburdened by what’s achievable on-screen.

Doc Frankenstein Explores the Conflict Between Science and Religion

Much Like the Original Novel

Doc Frankenstein and Tex get shot up

The Wachowskis haven’t made any more comics since the completion of Doc Frankenstein, and it would appear that Burlyman Entertainment is now well and truly defunct as a publisher. If Doc Frankenstein is their swansong in the world of comics, it’s one hell of a goodbye, as the story is filled with all the elements that have defined the Wachowskis’ entire career. As the perfect blend of so-called “high” and “low” art, Doc Frankenstein brings all the action, ideas, and heart that made the Wachowskis’ work unlike anything else out there.

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The completion of Doc Frankenstein shows that, every once in a while, good things come to those who wait. Yet for fans who didn’t know that the Wachowskis had their very own comic book, the entirety of Doc Frankenstein is now collected in a handsome volume that can be read in a single sitting. For fans of The Matrix looking for more of what made the Wachowskis such a powerful creative force in popular culture, Doc Frankenstein is the perfect recommendation and an absolute must-read.

Doc Frankenstein is available now from Burlyman Entertainment.